• Amity
    5.3k
    ...it seems the Lounge is where it's at, for un chat - or une chatte?
    Alors voilà!

    I don't want to write a heavy OP or to maintain a thread. So, this is good for me. If you've read my recent Feedback thread on philosophy categories, you've probably heard enough about my view of creativity and its importance. This, then, is more laid-back but still of interest. I hope it's good for you too :cool:

    I've been inspired by recent TPF exchanges. The last one with @wonderer1 got me thinking about war, PTSD and poetry. Not that I had to look far for war. Every minute of the day, there is a bombardment with ever-increasing horrors.

    Some journalists might be considered better or braver than others. Two female war correspondents spring to mind. Kate Adie and more recently Lindsey Hilsum.

    Here's what I read today. Some extracts from an extract:
    Over four decades reporting on conflict, Channel 4 News’s international editor has always carried a book of poetry with her. In this extract from her memoir, she explains why her own words were not always enough.

    In September 2022, a few days after Russian forces retreated from the Ukrainian town of Izium, I was standing outside an apartment block that had been split apart by a missile. Fifty-four residents had been killed in the Russian attack, which had taken place six months earlier. Purple and yellow wild flowers were growing in the rubble that filled the chasm between the two parts of the block.

    “It is not the houses. It is the space between the houses,” I thought. “It is not the streets that exist. It is the streets that no longer exist.” The words of James Fenton’s 1981 poem A German Requiem, about selective memory in the second world war, came to me when I could no longer find my own.

    Back at my hotel in Kharkiv, I looked it up.

    It is not your memories which haunt you.
    It is not what you have written down.
    It is what you have forgotten, what you must forget.
    What you must go on forgetting all your life.

    The idea that the spaces between the houses symbolised gaps in memory, and that forgetting might be essential if people were to live together in peace, encapsulated the future facing the Ukrainians I had met that day...

    ... A young couple told me that now the Ukrainian authorities were back, they planned to denounce their neighbours for collaboration with the occupiers. I couldn’t know if the neighbours really had collaborated with the Russians, or just done what they deemed necessary to survive. Either way, war had brought bitterness and enmity in its wake. Just like those in Fenton’s poem, from now on people’s lives in Izium would be polluted by suspicion, by the mistrustful look and the whispered word behind the hand.

    It is not what he wants to know.
    It is what he wants not to know.
    It is not what they say.
    It is what they do not say.

    My TV news report reflected some of this, but it did not have the allusive power of the poem. [...]

    Sometimes poetry can serve as a vaccination against despair. On 7 October 2023, militants from the Palestinian group Hamas breached the high-tech fence separating Gaza from Israel and went on a rampage of killing, rape and abduction. It was the single worst massacre of Jews since the Holocaust. Israel proceeded to bomb Gaza relentlessly, destroying homes, killing tens of thousands of civilians and depriving all Gazans of food, water and other basic necessities. The Israel Defense Forces invaded in tanks and armoured vehicles, fighting Hamas, which operated out of tunnels.

    The Israeli government told Gazans to flee to the south of the strip, which would be safe. It wasn’t – people were killed when bombs hit their tented camps. Many families were forced to flee multiple times – nowhere was safe. Even the dead could not rest in peace, as tanks ploughed up graveyards.
    Guardian - Lindsey Hilsum on war and the consolation of poetry

    I followed both her and Matt Frei, reporting for Ch4 news. Right from the get-go. Increasingly in danger, you could see the strain and exhaustion as Russia invaded Ukraine. And how it affected the people.
    What the viewer couldn't know was the physical and mental toll on the journalists.

    Hilsum seeks out balance and quotes from Palestinian and Israeli poets. And others. This is a substantive piece. And yes, the extract promotes her book 'I Brought the War with Me' (pub. 19th Sept).

    For me, this extract came at the right time. There is poetry in the writing. A reflective philosophy.
    Has anything poetic inspired you recently to think and reflect on today's everyday?
    Or has anything ordinary/extraordinary - the aesthetics of a cuppa tea - set your imagination and creative spirit free?
    Would that be termed a 'metaphysical imagination' as touched on recently in @Jack Cummins Surreal Ideas thread...?
  • javi2541997
    5.9k
    Has anything poetic inspired you recently to think and reflect on today's everyday?Amity

    Yes. I am currently reading Borges, and he dedicated a chapter for reviewing 'kennings'. A 'kenning' is an old poem that is characterised for including a large number of metaphors and ambiguity. Sadly, I am not very informed or acknowledged on Icelandic and Old Nordic poetry, so it is a bit difficult for me to follow some details and descriptions.
    Anyway, thanks to the vast and wonderful work of translating by Borges, I started to read and flowing my imagination around. I'd like to feel free and open to interpretation while reading kennings.

    If you don't mind, Amity, I'd like to share a kenning I read before:

    The fishing goes according to our [my] wishes, in that we have tried to lure the poison-serpent of the sea out of the heather of the field of the cod. The caster of the bait-gallows let the one grasped by the hook hang; at all events, things have turned out well for me in catching the trout.

    Reflecting on the ambiguity of the brief poem above, most experts on Scandinavian literature and poetry agreed that 'the heather of the field of the cod' means seaweed. Fascinating, isn't it? This kind of poetry is helping me to improve my imagination. :smile:

    Further readings: Skaldic Poetry.
  • Amity
    5.3k
    Hola, Javi, y muchas gracias :smile:

    I am currently reading Borges, and he dedicated a chapter for reviewing 'kennings'...If you don't mind, Amity, I'd like to share a kenning I read before:javi2541997

    I'm very happy that you shared your reading and introduced something new to me, and probably others.

    I am not very informed or acknowledged on Icelandic and Old Nordic poetry, so it is a bit difficult for me to follow some details and descriptions.javi2541997

    Yes, it's difficult to follow. However, I discovered that kennings are not only found in Old Nordic poetry.
    Excellent information from: https://www.litcharts.com/literary-devices-and-terms/kenning

    I remember the phrase 'rosy-fingered dawn' but it seems that is more of an 'epithet'?
    I read here that 'the kenning form still has resonance today and crops up even when people are not purposely thinking up kennings.'

    Strangely enough that reminded me of Il Postino, a film I started watching last night.
    The postman and the poet, Neruda, are sitting together on a beach watching the ocean. Neruda spontaneously reacts with poetry (or perhaps he is reciting from memory). As the postman (Mario) listens in awe to a poem about the ocean, so do we. It comes easy. We feel and see the effect it has.
    After Neruda finishes, Mario tells him:

    “I felt like a boat tossing about on those words.”

    The poet smiles. “You’ve invented a metaphor.”

    “But it doesn’t count because I didn’t mean to,” Mario says.

    “Meaning to is not important,” the poet says.

    ***
    Some people don't need to be taught about poetry. They simply have it within, without knowing the terms. Sometimes, help is needed to bring out the creativity. I love to hear about how children can learn.
    https://poetry4kids.com/lessons/how-to-write-a-kenning-poem/

    ***

    Reflecting on the ambiguity of the brief poem above, most experts on Scandinavian literature and poetry agreed that 'the heather of the field of the cod' means seaweed. Fascinating, isn't it? This kind of poetry is helping me to improve my imagination.javi2541997

    It is indeed fascinating. How do I say 'book-worm' in Spanish? :wink:
  • javi2541997
    5.9k
    Hola, Javi, y muchas graciasAmity

    Hola. :smile:

    Yes, it's difficult to follow. However, I discovered that kennings are not only found in Old Nordic poetry.
    Excellent information from:
    Amity

    Thanks, Amity. I really enjoy reading stuff like this. I wonder now if' stuff' is a bad word to express or refer to something. I am realising that I am using stuff' a lot while I interact with you, mates. I understand that it is not too important to express myself in a perfect manner, yet I guess that maybe I sound 'repetitive' in most of my posts and answers.


    It is indeed fascinating. How do I say 'book-worm' in Spanish? :wink:Amity

    We don't refer to worms but to mice to refer to that noun. We say: ratón de biblioteca. :smile:
  • Amity
    5.3k
    I wonder now if' stuff' is a bad word to express or refer to something. I am realising that I am using stuff' a lot while I interact with you, mates. I understand that it is not too important to express myself in a perfect manner, yet I guess that maybe I sound 'repetitive' in most of my posts and answers.javi2541997

    Oh, what a load of stuff and nonsense! OK. I use 'stuff' a lot, too. I like using it. It's what we are made of.

    I think the word 'mate' can grate, just like the word 'friend' can offend. Or 'pal' can appal. It's like, man, people trying too hard to be part of a crowd, man.

    We can be in danger of over-thinking and becoming too sensitive...that can be good or bad. Depending.
    If I worry about being perfect (an impossibility!), then my mind would seize up :gasp:


    We don't refer to worms but to mice to refer to that noun. We say: ratón de bibliotecajavi2541997

    Another thing I didn't know. Ain't language cool, mate :cool:
    Sure is, man :up:
  • wonderer1
    2.2k
    I think the word 'mate' can grate, just like the word 'friend' can offend. Or 'pal' can appal. It's like, man, people trying too hard to be part of a crowd, man.Amity

    :smile:
  • Amity
    5.3k
    Anyway, thanks to the vast and wonderful work of translating by Borges, I started to read and flowing my imagination around. I'd like to feel free and open to interpretation while reading kennings.javi2541997

    Yes, like you, I continue to be fascinated by interpretation and translation :nerd:
    Have you considered writing a kenning poem?
    Translators of Ancient Languages deserve a medal for passion, work and mastery. I wonder what kenning could be created for the word 'translator'? Hmm...

    An Old English epic keeps cropping up - Beowulf. So many types of translation. Here's a list of kennings from Seamus Heaney’s version:

    Kennings for King

    Ring-giver
    Treasure-giver
    Gold-giver
    Homeland’s guardian
    Guardian of the ring-hoard
    Gold-friend to retainers
    Shepherd of people

    The first monster that Beowulf slays is Grendel, referred to as:

    Hall-watcher
    Corpse-maker
    Shadow-stalker
    Hell-brute

    Beowulf has to face Grendel’s mother, a creature called:

    Hell-bride
    Hell-dam
    Tarn-hag
    Swamp-thing from hell
    Terror-monger
    Old English Kennings
  • Amity
    5.3k
    :smile: Hey, man! How ya hangin'? Did ye ken aboot kennings?
  • Amity
    5.3k
    Nobel Laureate Seamus Heaney's new translation of Beowulf comes to life in this gripping audio. Heaney's performance reminds us that Beowulf, written near the turn of another millennium, was intended to be heard not read.

    Composed toward the end of the first millennium of our era, Beowulf is the elegiac narrative of the adventures of Beowulf, a Scandinavian hero who saves the Danes from the seemingly invincible monster Grendel and, later, from Grendel's mother. He then returns to his own country and lives to old age before dying in a vivid fight against a dragon. - HighBridge Audio
    Youtube - Joshuas Mirror

    Beowulf - Seamus Heaney: Part 1 of 2 - with transcript [handy, if you don't have a spare hour to listen]

  • javi2541997
    5.9k
    Have you considered writing a kenning poem?Amity

    I tend to write poetry every day, but my poems are short and ambiguous, very similar to haiku. I'm even still writing haiku. I try to express melancholy, nostalgia, and memories through poetry because I am very sensitive regarding the past and 'old days'. It is the only way I can express how I feel. I think it would be impossible for me to describe how a sunset* feels otherwise. I only write in Spanish, but I dream that I will be able to write in English in the future. It is hard to switch emotions into another language. 

    By the way, now that we are talking about sunsets, kennings and nostalgia, I have been reading beautiful poems by Harry Martinson. A wonderful Swedish poet! I wish I could understand him in his native language, but I fully appreciate the big job by translators. :smile:
  • wonderer1
    2.2k
    Did ye ken aboot kennings?Amity


    wonderer

    Kenning-comprehender

    :wink:

    I took a Tolkien class in college, and one of the things discussed was Tolkien's work on Beowulf. I can't say I remembered the word "kenning", but I was familiar with such use of language in Old English poetry, and such.
  • Jack Cummins
    5.3k
    Aesthetic appreciation often gets left out of life, especially in news. There is so much emphasis on sensation with bad news. I don't have a television but see news on the phone and it frequently lowers my mood. Watching such news can even be addictive.

    Even though I like reading philosophy I usually have at least one novel on the go as it is about appreciating good writing, although philosophy being well written is important too. However, with novels the use of the senses allows one to connect to life and stories allow for imaginative daydreaming. I don't read much poetry but of course it works in the same way, as do all the arts.

    The novel which I am reading at the moment is 'Hamnet' by Maggie Farrell. I am finding it well written and with an intriguing storyline. I recommend it.

    I always try to read a novel with my morning coffees as it seems to get me in the right frame of mind to cope with the dramas of the day. I do see life as like a novel unfolding. On a negative side, that may be why I attract negative dramas. Another way of seeing this though is to be able to frame the negative dramas in a creative way as being part of a mythic quest.
  • Amity
    5.3k
    I tend to write poetry every day, but my poems are short and ambiguous, very similar to haiku. I'm even still writing haiku.javi2541997

    You make it sound easy and ordinary, like taking breakfast! I usually prefer short and sweet to long and winding. But that might be about to change, since reading more about Beowulf.

    It is the only way I can express how I feel. I think it would be impossible for me to describe how a sunset* feels otherwise. I only write in Spanish, but I dream that I will be able to write in English in the future. It is hard to switch emotions into another language.javi2541997

    Yes, sometimes only one word works for a nationality. Like the Scottish 'dreich', 'wheesht!' or 'scunnert'.

    I think translators face major challenges in capturing the sense and emotions of any age or story.
    What is the aim? How to achieve it in verse or prose? Direct v indirect phrasings? Old English verse with its strange language - compacting metaphors in kennings - is not to everyone's taste. And is perhaps better to spoken or sung aloud rather than read. I understand that Old English was chanted to string accompaniment.

    This article is excellent! It includes excerpts of the original with its meaning unpacked by different translators. Side-by-side showing the effects.
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Translating_Beowulf

    My time is up. So much more to say...later, all! :sparkle:
  • Amity
    5.3k
    wonderer

    Kenning-comprehender
    wonderer1

    Kenning-kenner?

    I took a Tolkien class in college, and one of the things discussed was Tolkien's work on Beowulf. I can't say I remembered the word "kenning", but I was familiar with such use of language in Old English poetry, and such.wonderer1

    Awesome! I have under-appreciated Tolkien, OE poetry, not to mention the Greek Odes. 'and such'? Perhaps not much of a hero worshipper?
    The wiki article, linked to earlier, fascinated me. The different views and arguments, not unlike philosophy. Tolkien, amazingly, used both prose and poetry and had clear views on translation:

    Tolkien noted that whatever a translator's preferences might be, the ancients such as the Beowulf poet had chosen to write of times already long gone by, using language that was intentionally archaic and sounding poetic to their audiences. Thus, Tolkien explains, the poet uses beorn and freca to mean "warrior" or "man", this last a usage already then restricted to heroic poetry; at the time, beorn was a variant of the word for bear, just as freca was another word for wolf, and the audience expected and enjoyed hearing such words in the special circumstance of a performance by a scop.

    The poet used high-sounding language to represent the heroic in the distant past. Tolkien therefore advised the translator to do the same, choosing verbs like "strike" and "smite" rather than "hit" or "whack", nouns like "guest" rather than "visitor", adjectives like "courteous" instead of "polite". His versions of Beowulf's voyage to Heorot in prose and verse, the latter in strictest Anglo-Saxon alliteration and metre[c] (with Tolkien's markup of metrical stresses), are:

    Tolkien's high-sounding language, meant to echo the Beowulf poet's diction:

    1. Beowulf 217-227 2. Tolkien's 1940 verse in "On Translating Beowulf"[d][37] 3. Tolkien's 1926 prose (176–185) in Beowulf: A Translation and Commentary[38]

    1.
    Gewat þa ofer wǣgholm | winde gefysed
    flota famiheals | fugle gelicost,
    oð þæt ymb antid | oþres dogores
    wundenstefna | gewaden hæfde,
    þæt ða liðende | land gesawon,
    brimclifu blican, | beorgas steape,
    side sænæssas; | þa wæs sund liden,
    eoletes æt ende. | þanon up hraðe
    Wedera lēode | on wang stigon,
    sæwudu sældon,— | syrcan hrysedon,
    guðgewædo;

    2.
    She wènt then over wáve-tòps, | wínd pursúed her,
    fléet, fóam-thròated | like a flýing bírd;
    and her cúrving prów | on its cóurse wáded,
    till in dúe séason | on the dáy áfter
    those séafàrers | sáw befóre them
    shóre-cliffs shímmering | and shéer móuntains,
    wíde cápes by the wáves: | to wáter's énd
    the shíp had jóurneyed. | Then ashóre swíftly
    they léaped to lánd, | lórds of Góthland,
    bóund fást their bóat. | Their býrnies ráttled,
    grím géar of wár.

    3.
    Over the waves of the deep she went sped by the wind,
    sailing with foam at throat most like unto a bird,
    until in due hour upon the second day her curving beak
    had made such way that those sailors saw the land,
    the cliffs beside the ocean gleaming,
    and sheer headlands and capes thrust far to sea.
    Then for that sailing ship the journey was at an end.
    thence the men of the Windloving folk climbed swiftly up the beach,
    and made fast the sea-borne timbers of their ship;
    their mail-shirts they shook, their raiment of war.
    Wiki - Translating Beowulf

    I numbered them because the 3 parallel texts didn't transfer well to TPF format.
    Interesting to compare. For a quick understanding of the story, perhaps prose is better. It's more direct and not so much of a puzzle. However, it loses something of the compactness and the alliteration and kennings pulled me in at the start:
    She wènt then over wáve-tòps, wínd pursúed her,
    fléet, fóam-thròated like a flýing bírd;
  • Amity
    5.3k
    Aesthetic appreciation often gets left out of life, especially in news. There is so much emphasis on sensation with bad news. I don't have a television but see news on the phone and it frequently lowers my mood. Watching such news can even be addictive.Jack Cummins

    The sensational attracts and sells. The aesthetic senses are stirred in everyday life. News coverage can give a positive or negative aesthetic experience. Depending.

    Many only read enough to keep them posted. As you say, too much of the 'bad' can bring you down,
    It can be addictive, just as watching 'soaps' or visiting TPF can be! It's up to the individual to realise when enough is enough. The current lead-up to the American elections and the Para/Olympics only a few examples of excitement. Once caught, it's hard not to binge-watch series on BBC iPlayer or similar. Whereas in days of yore, we had to be patient and wait a week between episodes.

    You make good points and thanks ( I think!) for the recommendation. So many books...

    I always try to read a novel with my morning coffees as it seems to get me in the right frame of mind to cope with the dramas of the day. I do see life as like a novel unfolding. On a negative side, that may be why I attract negative dramas. Another way of seeing this though is to be able to frame the negative dramas in a creative way as being part of a mythic quest.Jack Cummins

    You know, that's something I've never been able to do. Sit down at breakfast to read, anything!
    When I went to pay for some books in a second-hand bookshop, I bemoaned the fact that I had too many. Something would have to give! (addicted to book-buying, rather than reading?)
    The lady just smiled and said. "You can never have enough books. There's no rush to read them all. Take your time, read slowly at the kitchen table, over breakfast."
    Great sales pitch but, as a lover of books, she meant it!

    Ah, the dramatic stories in our lives. Are they really so negative and draw you in to more? They might seem so at the time but therein lies the challenges needed for growth. As you say, a re-framing of life and its chapters.

    Strange how being aware of all kinds of everything can change our attitude to life. Our aesthetics.

    I've never forgotten something a grandparent once wrote in my 'autograph book':
    'If you look where you are going, you will go where you are looking'.
    Kindly written after I bumped my head on a lamp-post at their front garden. Looking and waving at them, both at the window, as I hurried back to primary school after lunch.
    First philosophy?
  • Amity
    5.3k
    I do see life as like a novel unfolding. On a negative side, that may be why I attract negative dramas. Another way of seeing this though is to be able to frame the negative dramas in a creative way as being part of a mythic quest.Jack Cummins

    I've been thinking about people and how their space, place or environment can effect their affect.
    The link between aesthetics and politics.

    OK, I could start with politics and popstars. The current, high profile example being that of Trump and Taylor Swift. I won't go into all of that but it was interesting to read her reasons for publicly endorsing Harris. Right after the Harris-Trump debate. Some of it a result of Trump's misrepresentation and Vance's comments about 'Childless, Cat Ladies'.
    The cat as pet, for human consumption, continues to play a role in the Trump campaign. Go figure. Tapping into our aesthetics.

    Vance, the Ohio senator, has faced a backlash for a clip in which he called several prominent Democrats - including Harris - "a bunch of childless cat ladies who are miserable at their own lives". He recently said his comments were "sarcastic".

    Swift went on to compliment Harris's choice of vice-presidential candidate, Minnesota Governor Tim Walz, who she said had been "been standing up for LGBTQ+ rights, IVF, and a woman's right to her own body for decades".

    The singer said she was in part motivated to share her voting decision with the public after an AI image of her falsely endorsing Trump was posted on his website.

    "It really conjured up my fears around AI, and the dangers of spreading misinformation," she said. "It brought me to the conclusion that I need to be very transparent about my actual plans for this election as a voter."
    BBC News - Taylor Swift endorses Harris

    I hope she and her concert goers, fans, will be safe. There are some, pretty dark religious/political figures around with murder in their angry hearts. Easily triggered by Trump who called her a "very liberal person" and said that she will "pay the price for it in the marketplace. She must 'pay the price'...

    ***

    Now, let's take the high road to Scotland! How authors are inspired by the environment; past, present and future. So many. Here's an article by Peter May:

    On the surface, little appears to have changed in the 30 years that bestselling author Peter May has been visiting the Isle of Lewis. But tourism has had a big impact – from Sunday opening hours to a deep water port for cruise shipsGuardian - Scotland holidays

    I've read that setting is important when writing a novel. Indeed, it can be seen as a character.
    Any thoughts? On Cities v Country? The personal experience - where our imagination and creativity can lead.

    And remember Aesthetics and Creativity are all-inclusive! Not just subsets of 'Philosophy of Art'.
    Science, maths and technology are included. I don't know much about that though...

    While aestheticization of life is not a new phenomenon, what is noteworthy in the so-called organizational aesthetics and artification strategy is that they deploy art and art-like ways of thinking and acting in those areas of life which have not been traditionally associated with art or aesthetics: medicine, business, education, sports, and science, among others, as well as organizational life in general (Darsø 2004; Naukkarinen and Saito 2012; Ratiu 2017b). These professional practices typically privilege rational discourse comprised of logic and rules, but they cannot ignore their aesthetic dimensions.SEP - Aesthetics of the Everyday
  • Jack Cummins
    5.3k

    As far as aesthetics goes, environment has such a large part in appreciation of life. When my room gets messed up, which is often, I feel so gloomy and I often go out on busses to look out of the window and daydream. Also, as people spend more time on digital devices this may have an impact. As much as I love TPF, I do need breaks from staring at a screen. The overuse may be hypnotic, especially with the blue light affecting eyes detrimentally and there may be some radioactive affect on the brain.

    The other side to this though can be how mood itself affects aesthetics. I find that the whole world seems to look different according to state out of mind. People don't seem to speak of this often and I wonder whether they notice such differences. If I am going to create art or write fiction the first priority is getting into the right state of consciousness.

    Music can help with altering consciousness this. I also notice the whole experience of aesthetic appreciation of music is mind dependent. It may even explain why music tastes differ so much, as people may tune into different frequencies in response to music and associations.
  • Amity
    5.3k
    Trump supporter Elon Musk, known to be the father of 12 children, posted on his social-media platform X (formerly Twitter): "Fine Taylor … you win … I will give you a child and guard your cats with my life."BBC News - Taylor Swift endorses Harris

    Talking about aesthetics, politics and morals:

    Some people have called this 'unsettling'. It is disgusting. It is a male way of showing contempt, control and power over a woman. 'I will give you a child' - he knows that would be against her will. So, how is he going to give her a child? Not by offering one of his own but by impregnation. Against her will.
    That can be interpreted as a threat to rape. Pure and simple. But hey, it was only a joke, man.

    Trump was accused of rape but was only found liable for 'sexual abuse' .He has made comments about his fame enabling him to do anything he likes, including 'grabbing pussy'. He is a disgusting criminal and yet look how close the race is for him to be President of the US. Un-fucking-believable. We could get creative with nouns and adjectives. Some see him as 'strong', others say 'wrong'. Aesthetics, huh?

    Let's look at Rape Culture:

    Chris O'Sullivan asserts that acts of sexism are commonly employed to validate and rationalize normative misogynistic practices. For instance, sexist jokes may be told to foster disrespect for women and an accompanying disregard for their well-being, or a rape victim might be blamed for being raped because of how she dressed or acted. O'Sullivan examines rape culture and fraternities, identifying the socialization and social roles that contribute to sexual aggression, and looks at "frat life" and brotherhood ideals of competition and camaraderie. In these groups, sex is viewed by young men as a tool of gaining acceptance and bonding with fellow "brothers", as they engage in contests over sex with women.[36]: 26  In O'Sullivan's article, sexualized violence towards women is regarded as part of a continuum in a society that regards women's bodies as sexually available by default.[3Wiki - Rape culture

    Frat life, brotherhood, sex and rape. Who or what does that remind you of? I can't forget this:

    Christine Blasey Ford, the psychology professor who accused Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh of sexual assault, used a rare interview to detail the trauma she faced after her explosive allegations thrust her into a charged confirmation battle for one of the nation’s most powerful positions...

    Kavanaugh was narrowly confirmed and has since become a key voice on the Supreme Court – a sometimes-harbinger of which way its conservative 6-3 supermajority is leaning on controversial issues like abortion, guns and affirmative action.
    CNN - Kavanaugh accuser Christine Blasey Ford - consequences of testimony

    The US Supreme Court overturned Roe v Wade on June 2022. Previously, access to abortion was a federal right in the US. Its overturning was a regressive step undoing 50yrs of legal protection. Rights hard fought for.

    More of this and worse will happen to minorities if Harris doesn't win the Election. A woman's appearance and behaviour still more harshly judged than a (white) man's. Harris has done well to reach this point. A few more weeks to go...
  • Amity
    5.3k
    Thanks, Jack, I agree with much of what you say.
    The other side to this though can be how mood itself affects aesthetics. I find that the whole world seems to look different according to state out of mind. People don't seem to speak of this often and I wonder whether they notice such differences. If I am going to create art or write fiction the first priority is getting into the right state of consciousness.Jack Cummins

    I think people are aware of feeling better when the weather changes from dark, dreichness to sunny, lightness. Up here, anyway, people are more likely to relax and smile, pass the time of day, talking about the weather...
    A real sense of 'All's well with the world!' even when it isn't.

    What is the 'right state of consciousness'? We can't change the weather but we can change our attitude to it. Sometimes feeling low or angry can result in a downpour or outpouring of thoughts and ideas.

    I feel so gloomy and I often go out on busses to look out of the window and daydream.Jack Cummins

    Yes, I seem to recall that is where some of your short stories stem from.
    Or from nightmares...?
  • Jack Cummins
    5.3k

    Weather makes such a lot of difference to life and that is probably why English people speak about it so much. I find weather extremes difficult and have struggled so much with it becoming so cold for September. Ì have noticed it has affected my thinking processes badly and been a triggering negative thinking and low mood. However, I guess that we should be grateful for cool weather when some are struggling with unsafe heat. Of course, it is probably a lot colder in Scotland than London.

    I have always been fascinated by dreams and have some bizarre ones. When stressed I do have nightmares at times, including borderline states on the verge of waking or falling asleep. I have always seen dreams as a source for writing and art. As for daydreaming, I used to get told off for it at school and I think I was noticed for doing it at work sometimes. Some people are the opposite and don't like being alone with their thoughts.

    Now, mobile phones are the new distraction or even a source for imaginative searching. Texts and emails feature in novels so much. I do send texts but don't use text talk. One difficult but new drama is accidentally sending a text to the wrong person. I know of a student nurse who sent a text meant for her boyfriend, saying, 'I love you.'
  • Amity
    5.3k

    Talking about weather, consciousness, feeling, writing, reading and such like...

    I've previously mentioned the Future Learn course 'How to Read a Novel' (HTRAN). It's free and lasts 4 weeks, a novel pw. The video interviews/transcript with the authors are a highlight.

    This year, Week 4 was an exploration of 'Settings' - using the book 'Lori and Joe' by Amy Arnold.
    Amy Arnold is a trained neuropsychologist; this comes through in the conversation. Arnold attempts to capture consciousness in prose. How to get into someone's mind...
    https://www.futurelearn.com/courses/how-to-read-a-novel/15/steps/1926598

    Right away, she talks of her inspiration as a 'feeling' she wanted to share with the reader. It is 'specific and familiar' but it's also 'unnameable'. The novel takes place on a single day, on a single walk. Over valley and fells in Cumbria. The landscape/weather 'almost become a character, you relate to.'

    Arnold talks of her novel as being a bit like a tanka or haiku. In the sense that it is a 'compression' of time, space but also emotion. That reminded me of @javi2541997' and 'unbearable nostalgia'. According to Arnold, the unnameable feeling is 'not about communicating longing, isolation, loneliness or even the collision of all those things.'

    I started reading her novel a few months ago but couldn't get to grips with it. Too sad, a bit depressing. But then, I read more:
    https://www.newstatesman.com/culture/books/goldsmiths-prize/2023/11/amy-arnold-interview-fiction-lori-joe
    After getting to know the author, I feel like giving the novel second chance.

    Perhaps there is a time when we are more 'ready' for a book and meeting the lives within. Philosophically, personally, poetically...

    The other one I'm now attracted to is Week 2's 'Though the Bodies Fall' by Noel O' Regan. The focus is on 'Characterisation'. However, the 4 elements of a novel interact (wk1 Plot, wk3 Dialogue). And the Setting, here, seems to me to be central. I don't know, I've yet to read it.

    Though the Bodies Fall by Noel O’Regan centres on trauma and its aftermath. The protagonist, Micheál Burnes, resides in his family’s bungalow at the end of Kerry Head in Ireland, a picturesque location with cliffs notoriously known as a suicide spot. With an evocative sense of place, the novel describes a familial inheritance where, for three generations, Micheál’s family has felt a duty to guard the area and save the souls of those seeking eternal relief there. From a young age, Micheál is taught by his mother to assist the so-called “visitors,” making it a life mission and a spiritual calling.

    https://www.futurelearn.com/courses/how-to-read-a-novel/15/steps/1926571
  • Amity
    5.3k
    Now, mobile phones are the new distraction or even a source for imaginative searching. Texts and emails feature in novels so much.Jack Cummins

    Amy Arnold deliberately chose to have Lori walk out without her mobile phone. No contact meant she had time to recover, to have peace to wonder and reflect.
    The environment and atmosphere creating a sense of spiritual space. Mystical.
    A stream of consciousness.

    Technology can help or hinder in our searches. But can it recreate that 'unnameable feeling'?

    Perhaps this can only found or sensed in 'metaphysical imagination' ? Or simply good old common sense?

    The aesthetics of landscape setting free our imagination and creativity.
    As described in Ronald Hepburn's article:
    https://www.environmentandsociety.org/mml/landscape-and-metaphysical-imagination
  • wonderer1
    2.2k
    @Amity

    Sorry it has taken me so long to respond. I suppose I was waiting for that question about metaphysical intuition to stop rattling around in my subconscious.

    Perhaps not much of a hero worshipper?Amity

    Well, I'm certainly a hero appreciator, but I suppose not much of a worshipper in general.

    Interesting to compare. For a quick understanding of the story, perhaps prose is better. It's more direct and not so much of a puzzle. However, it loses something of the compactness and the alliteration and kennings pulled me in at the start:Amity

    It is so interesting and mysterious, the effect that poetic elements seem to have on us.

    I once got the following response to a sentence I had written on another forum, "Something about that sentence just makes it feel awesome when you read it out loud, especially the ending. Nice use of words wonderer."

    My first thought was something like, "What??? How in the world did what I had said result in that sort of reaction?"

    My sentence that was being responded to was, "I'm afraid "self" is too ambiguous a concept on physicalism to expect any clear cut quantification of the accuracy of self referential statements in all conceivable cases."

    I had to look at what I had written to figure out that it was probably a matter of the alliteration, which it seems my subconscious had managed to work into the sentence, while consciously I was struggling to express something semantically complex in a succinct way, with no conscious consideration of how it would sound.

    Long story short... I like alliteration as well, perhaps more than I know. :smile:

    Anyway, back to metaphysical imagination...

    I've come to the conclusion that I am intuitively epistemologically opposed to compartmentalizing imagination in such a way that it would make any sense to me to say, "This is metaphysical imagination and this is not." I suppose I see an important part of imagination as being a way of escaping the ruts of unimaginative thinking, and calling some imagination "metaphysical" seems likely to create the sort of boundaries to my thinking that I seek to escape via imagination.

    Of course, you are welcome to inspire me to look at things differently. :wink:
  • Amity
    5.3k
    Sorry it has taken me so long to respond. I suppose I was waiting for that question about metaphysical intuition to stop rattling around in my subconscious.wonderer1

    Again, please, there is no need to apologise for any 'late' reply. The 'thread' of whatever can be picked up just whenever. It's good to know that the phrase 'metaphysical imagination' is still being held in mind and questioned. It has been bothering my backburner of a brain. However, rusty knobs on my black wrought iron railings...

    I'm certainly a hero appreciator, but I suppose not much of a worshipper in general.wonderer1

    :smile: What kind of 'hero' do you tend to appreciate?

    It is so interesting and mysterious, the effect that poetic elements seem to have on us.wonderer1

    I guess some might ask the question: "what are 'poetic elements?'' How do they show in expression?

    I was taken aback when a cousin-in-law artist and sculptor remarked that I reminded him of an Australian poet. I can't remember her name now. It seems that I use alliteration and metaphors in a rhythmic and sometimes rhyming fashion. When I was made aware of this, it made me self-conscious. When we examine our ways of conversation, speech patterns, it can stem the flow...for a wee while.

    I once got the following response to a sentence I had written on another forum, "Something about that sentence just makes it feel awesome when you read it out loud, especially the ending. Nice use of words wonderer."wonderer1

    The pity is that this kind of positive aesthetics and feedback is not always recognised, far less given expression. It makes forum writing worthwhile and can lead to more thought...

    I had to look at what I had written to figure out that it was probably a matter of the alliteration, which it seems my subconscious had managed to work into the sentence, while consciously I was struggling to express something semantically complex in a succinct way, with no conscious consideration of how it would sound.

    Long story short... I like alliteration as well, perhaps more than I know. :
    wonderer1

    Yes, that could indeed have been why the receiver/responder reacted that way. Your analysis of the subconscious filtering through the conscious as you write seems reasonable. I think that wanting to express the complex clearly and to captivate the audience in imagination can be difficult.

    For some this seems natural but others (a perfectionist or artist) would be motivated to edit and polish until the words sound right. Even grammatically correct. I love the different ways we can use or manipulate words, images and sounds to improve understanding.

    Anyway, back to metaphysical imagination...

    I've come to the conclusion that I am intuitively epistemologically opposed to compartmentalizing imagination in such a way that it would make any sense to me to say, "This is metaphysical imagination and this is not." I suppose I see an important part of imagination as being a way of escaping the ruts of unimaginative thinking, and calling some imagination "metaphysical" seems likely to create the sort of boundaries to my thinking that I seek to escape via imagination.
    wonderer1

    Did we ever move away from 'metaphysical imagination'? I agree it is difficult to see what the adjective 'metaphysical' adds to 'imagination'. However, it is one of those topics open to all fields who analyse the concept of imagination to bits. Some of it is useful. And can even inspire.

    I was delighted to find the online magazine Interalia - 'dedicated to the interactions between the arts, sciences and consciousness.'
    Falling between the cracks of scientific and artistic expression. Jumping between the modes...
    The title of this excellent article - wow, how could I resist?

    https://www.interaliamag.org/interviews/cloudy-with-a-chance-of-joy/

    And I've bookmarked this:
    https://iep.utm.edu/hume-ima/
    David Hume (1711–1776) approaches questions in epistemology, metaphysics, ethics and aesthetics via questions about our minds.

    Of course, you are welcome to inspire me to look at things differentlywonderer1

    As you and others are welcome to inspire me! :cool:
  • Amity
    5.3k
    As you and others are welcome to inspire me! :cool:Amity

    Talking about inspiration. The what, who, why, where and how.
    As a concept it can be found in all the usual places. Here's one:
    https://www.berkeleywellbeing.com/inspiration.html

    I had never read anything by Terry Pratchett until recently. I've just finished 'Small Gods' - the audio version - and well, so glad I found it when I did. This is the kind of experience that can inspire.

    Hilary Mantel is another author I haven't exposed my mind to. And yet, today, I read of her inspiration to others. https://www.theguardian.com/books/2024/sep/19/hilary-mantel-mentor-seven-things-she-taught-me-writing-and-life

    A BTL comment and advice by 'Sallycycles' hooked me right from the start. Read something different from your 'usual'. Yes! That's exactly what I've been doing but also listening.

    [That is one of the brilliant aspects to TPF's 'Literary Event' that is now apparently only happening once a year. People are inspired and stimulated to write, read and respond to a selection of stories and poems by posters that they think they know. The guessing game surprised many!
    @Baden @Jamal and everyone involved in the venture - please keep this alive :pray: ]

    Here's the full Sallycycles:

    I was told by an old, and now sadly late friend and phenomenally successful writer, that every writer and aspiring writer should read every day; not just books that they enjoy, but ones that they would otherwise pass by on the other side off the road. This advice seems to be shared among other writers I know through my work.
    I was also told to write what you want to read. This may seem like an obvious statement, but for a follower of romantic fiction to try writing a bloody crime thriller may not be wise. Richard Adams [Watership Down] said he could never write a human story, so he didn’t, and he stuck with what he was comfortable with. The book was rejected by many publishers, but was eventually taken up by one and, as they say, the rest is history.
    Whatever you do, write every day; make time to be alone or wherever you are comfortable, but write. J K Rowling said to Jealously Protect your Writing Days, Neil Gaiman has a policy of going down to his writing shed with no tech, no 'phone signal and no distractions, and says to himself, “You don’t have to write. You have permission to not write, but you don’t have permission to do anything else.” Dame Jacquline Wilson can write anywhere from her kitchen table to the back of a taxi – I suspect she is an exception.
    Above all, write, and write every day. Be it 1,000 or 2,000 words of your book; be it a diary entry; be it a description of a spider crawling across your wall, or a spring sparrow singing outside your window, but write. Writing isn't a muscle, but it behaves like one - if it doesn't get used, it starts to get weak and needs re-strengthening; it is best to keep it active.
    All day, every day I think as I am going about life - sometimes it will be about describing how someone is crossing a road - the waiting and watching for a space, the light semi-jog over or the I-have-a-Right-and-You-Will-Wait crosser; how the sound of a closing car door behind you after you pass it could be sinister [how would you describe that on paper?]; an autumnal leaf falling from a tree in the cold weather to form a pile on the ground, and what may be living in the leaf-litter... the list is endless. My mind never stops working.
    Never stop thinking about writing. Never stop planning openings - even if you never go further with that story. Write 200, 400 or 600 word pieces to keep the muscle strong, and make sure you stick to the exact number to practise on-the-fly editing. Think about planning, but don't obsess – neither Lee Child or Stephen King plan. They start with a vague idea and with the first word hoping the next follows. Agatha Christie planned, and planned and planned for months, and then she wrote, and she 'wrote' her books in as little as a month - but only after months of planning for hours each day. Try both methods and see how they suit you.
    To close, it is a simple process, and a quick look in any bookshop or supermarket, and a glance through any of the popular books will show you that not all work published is of a high literary standard, but it has been published. There is skill, there is perseverance, and there is a very large dollop of luck.
    One final thought – no self-respecting writer or would be writer [indeed, if you have ever written with the intention of publication, in my mind, you are already a writer] will ever be without a notebook and pen or pencil. A simple reporters’ note book and a cheap ballpoint [do try and avoid the plastic disposable ones… we have far too much plastic litter on the planet] will work just as well as an expensive book and a Mont Blanc fountain pen, and they attract far less attention in the coffee shop or café, or on the packed 7:45 commuter train.
    There, 700 words in a matter of minutes and now to make my wife a warm cup of Lucozade to sooth her angry throat.
    Sallycycles
  • Vera Mont
    4.4k
    I just came in here for a brief respite from fighting over animal intelligence.

    I've read that setting is important when writing a novel. Indeed, it can be seen as a character.Amity
    I used to love the TV series Ballykissangel, in which the village was possibly the best character.
    In my own work, I pay attention to the details of setting; consider it important not to have lily of the valley blooming in September or long shadows at 1pm or a piano in a poor man's cottage, and of course, I had to put quite a lot of details in the manor where a quasi historical romance took place. But I had not considered the location very important until I attempted SF. Do you know how much research and meticulous planning goes into inventing a planet? Damn real, it becomes a character: it haunts your dreams for months on end.
  • Amity
    5.3k
    I just came in here for a brief respite from fighting over animal intelligence.Vera Mont

    Ah, yes. I pop into the Rational thinking thread for my early morning entertainment :wink:
    Some recent heated exchanges remind me of 'fighting like cats and dogs'.
    I really wanted to poop 'Plato ate Dogs' for Breakfast!' or 'Cats are my Go-To for Supper!'...but resisted.

    A few articles from Philosophy Now:
    Exploring the largely wordless love bond: Prof. Jeremy Barris 2008
    https://philosophynow.org/issues/67/Plato_is_my_dog_yo_Dogs_Love_and_Truth
    Philosophers on Dogs: Prof. Matt Qvortrup 2023
    https://philosophynow.org/issues/160/Philosophers_on_Dogs

    Back to the cat-dog relationship... as usual, wiki has all you ever need to know.
    Curiosity, the linky scent, led me to a children's poem, The Duel by Eugene Field:
    https://poets.org/poem/duel
    Almost unbelievably, this light-hearted children's poem has been analysed:
    https://poemanalysis.com/eugene-field/the-duel/

    But yeah, truth and knowledge...

    I pay attention to the details of setting; consider it important not to have lily of the valley blooming in September or long shadows at 1pm or a piano in a poor man's cottage, and of course, I had to put quite a lot of details in the manor where a quasi historical romance took place. But I had not considered the location very important until I attempted SF.Vera Mont

    The shades and colour of detail certainly matter. To allow the reader to engage all senses in an imaginative exploration. I guess there has to be a determination as to how much...and how 'real'.

    Hilary Mantel's fictionalised history novels I haven't read. However, it seems that - just as in films like say, Braveheart - history buffs get on their high horse. About dates, appearances and relationships.
    These royal characters couldn't have met then because...

    However, as long as people are made aware that it is fictionalised, then if the story catches their imagination and they want to know more, then what is the problem?

    Do you know how much research and meticulous planning goes into inventing a planet? Damn real, it becomes a character: it haunts your dreams for months on end.Vera Mont

    I don't know how you keep sane! Of course, you could get AI or that chatty person to help out - perhaps even write the story for you?!

    When it came to my one and only venture into TPF 'Literary Event' (how grand-sounding!), my mind was completely taken over by 'Red, White and Blue' for about a week. No great research required, funnily enough. However, I had been steeped in certain novels and inspired to turn a fairy-tale 'hero' into that of a female 'heroine'. The 3-line poem 'Sempre' followed a strong 'feeling' after reading a poster's exchange re his daughter wishing gender transition.

    I can only imagine the amount of research undertaken for any novel. How after years of reading, the author has to decide what to leave out. The hard stuff not always conducive to a good read...

    I'm now recalling your cat story and javi's dog haiku...

    https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/13707/waiting-for-the-midnight-mouse-by-vera-mont

    https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/14555/my-dog-by-javi2541997

    And while I'm here...
    I'd just like to say how pissed off I am at @Jamal for removing his plum pudding story. It is if it never happened. And yet, twas brillig with some fascinating feedback to it...a clear, stand-out winner.
    Really, Jamal, why? It had a dog in it, didn't it? Can't you re-instate...?
  • Amity
    5.3k
    PS After revisiting the years of TPF short stories, I would like to add that there have been many highlights, some low, but overall an exceptional creative activity.

    I've noted and just responded to a wonderful comment left by @john27 at the end of my story discussion. https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/14546/red-white-and-blue-by-amity

    For me, the whole experience, story and feedback, was an amazing, exhilarating ride.
    A weird sense of fulfilment and sheer joy. Probably never to be repeated.
    Thanks to all who made it so! :flower: :sparkle: :flower:
  • Vera Mont
    4.4k
    I don't know how you keep sane! Of course, you could get AI or that chatty person to help out - perhaps even write the story for you?!Amity
    Writing stories is one of the ways I keep sane. World-building takes a lot of time and thought, but there is something quite magical in immersing oneself in an imaginary place, climate, scenery, culture, inventing people, dwellings, food crops... You get to be a deity of sorts. My OG chivvied me into writing a sequel, because he wanted to live in Ozimord again.
    Google Earth is a wonderful tool; last year, I vicariously travelled a large part of the far east by land and water and became intimate with the topography of Wisconsin.
    Have not even poked my nose into a chatty site; I'm not ready for a relationship with AI; holding out for HAL 9001.


    Re dogs vs cats. We used to have both in our household and they got along just fine. One pugnacious young tom would get into fights. If he couldn't win, he'd lure the opponent to our yard and our Newfoundland dog. A gentle soul, she would never hurt a cat - just gently put her enormous paw on him, while her own cat scuttle away. Another time, we had a part Siamese cat and two small black dogs. The dogs' favourite entertainment was to tear up Kleenex and spread it all over the room. We would hide the tissue way up high on a bookshelf or cupboard -- and still, somehow they got hold of it. So one day my mother and I left the house and crept around to look through the window. It didn't take long for the cat to climb up and throw the box down to the waiting dogs. Then she yawned, folded her arms and watched them tear it apart - a joyous scene.
    Yeah, pet stories.... Sigh! I miss Sammy! She used to sleep or just lounge in a flat box on top of my computer while I was writing. Kraken is no fun anymore - he's off living his own outdoor life - and the orphan kitten is just a baby.

    I'm about done with the rational animal thread; seven times around the same stunted mulberry bush is enough.
  • wonderer1
    2.2k
    I just came in here for a brief respite from fighting over animal intelligence.Vera Mont

    Think you can escape so easily huh? :wink:

    Do you know how much research and meticulous planning goes into inventing a planet? Damn real, it becomes a character: it haunts your dreams for months on end.Vera Mont

    Are there any particular aspects of creating a planet that stand out?

    I once wrote a paper on the use of invented mythology and folklore in works of fiction like Watership Down and LeGuin's Left Hand of Darkness, and the richness that can be added to a story by such invented mythologies and folklores. Just that one aspect of inventing a fictional world sounds exhausting to me.
  • Vera Mont
    4.4k
    Are there any particular aspects of creating a planet that stand out?wonderer1
    The hardest part for me is language. I needed a large dry and a smaller wet planet that humans could colonize and where they would develop differently. What would they live on? What seeds would they have brought from Earth and what local fauna and flora would they have adapted? Every one of those items needs a name that relates back to an earth language but has changed over time. And the characters have to use these words in natural conversation.
    Since I knew the origins and history of my colonists, I had a cultural base from which to extrapolate social organization, beliefs and mores.
    The most fun parts were mapping Wisconsin and Oceania.

    The most fun part of any book is when it's finished, the OG and I design a cover together. They may not be world's best designs, but they entertain us for hours.

    The most fun project I ever had was a collaborative medieval 'fairy tale', with kings and knights, a dragon and a witch. Had to learn about armour and castles.
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